
BP appoints former CRH boss Albert Manifold as new chairman
Mr Lund had announced plans in April to step down 'in due course', but the group said it would probably take until 2026 to find his successor.
Shares in BP lifted 1% in early morning trading.
Aviva chief executive Dame Amanda Blanc, BP's senior independent director who led the hunt for Mr Lund's successor, said Mr Manifold was 'the ideal candidate to oversee BP's next chapter'.
She said: 'Albert has a relentless focus on performance which is well suited to BP's needs now and into the future.
'He transformed and refocused CRH into a global leader.'
CRH, which has its headquarters in Ireland, switched its stock market listing from London to New York in 2023 and has since seen its share price rocket by 74%.
Speculation has swirled over whether BP will move its London listing to Wall Street after activist investor Elliott Management built up a stake in the group.
But BP chief executive Murray Auchincloss has previously dismissed the rumours, saying in April the group had no plans to change its listing.
Mr Lund has been chairman since 2019, but he has presided over a more challenging past few years for the firm.
He oversaw the hiring of former chief executive Bernard Looney, who quit in September 2023 after failing to disclose his past relationships with company colleagues.
Mr Lund also played a key part in overseeing the group setting its net zero agenda, but the firm has since rowed back on the shift towards green energy.
BP bowed to pressure from shareholders by vowing to accelerate investment in oil and gas while slashing renewable spending by nearly three-quarters.
In a major rebuttal for a FTSE 100 company, Mr Lund received a near 25% vote against his re-election at the firm's annual general meeting in April.
Ahead of the AGM, a group of 48 institutional investors had criticised the board for not offering a direct vote on the oil major's revised strategy, while environmental groups fiercely criticised the climate row-back.
The vote was largely seen as a protest, as Mr Lund had already announced his departure at the time of the AGM.

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Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
BP's scramble to rally big investors behind new chief
Amanda Blanc embarked on an intense charm offensive among top BP shareholders last week to convince them that the choice of low-profile building materials executive Albert Manifold as chairman made sense. There had been an expectation in the City that a thorough recruitment process – conducted by the no-nonsense Aviva chief executive – who is BP's senior independent director and who led the search – might yield a more prominent chairman with wider knowledge of the energy industry. BP was stung by early criticism of Manifold by City brokers Panmure Gordon, who accused the oil giant's board of a 'panic appointment'. The energy giant also found it necessary to repudiate derogatory comments made by an unnamed 'bitter and twisted' losing candidate for the post. Working from Aviva's Canadian headquarters in the last few days, Blanc spoke to all of BP's leading UK and American investors and has seemingly managed to turn the tide of opinion. Most now are reportedly positive about the BP board's final choice. But there was some disappointment at the oil giant's headquarters about the lack of a rise in the share price following the announcement, as well as at some of the negative briefing in the Square Mile. Blanc is said to have convinced leading investors that the naysayers who challenged the choice of Manifold 'lacked credibility'. In selling the selection to the City, BP and its advisers have pointed to Manifold's stellar, under-the-radar performance at CRH, where he drove the value of the group's shares up 342 per cent during a ten-year tenure. The share price performance of CRH, which moved its listing to New York two years ago, is described by BP insiders as 'magnificent'. Blanc is also understood to have pointed to Manifold's considerable experience in making deals, and his knowledge of a building materials industry that has come under close scrutiny from regulators. Despite claims about the new chairman's modest Irish-based lifestyle, it has been noted that he became one of the best rewarded executives in the British Isles, amassing some £54 million of stock options between 2020 and 2024. But while Manifold has a reputation for successfully managing bids and deals, chairing the oil giant is regarded very differently. Being BP chairman requires great diplomatic skills given that its operations include sensitive territories such as Iraq. He will also have to contend with the battle being waged by chief executive Murray Auchincloss to refocus the company on oil production after a disastrous effort under his predecessor Bernard Looney to transmogrify the company into a green energy pioneer. Nevertheless, BP insists that the job of chairman is to lead the board and hold the management to account. 'It is not to be the deep technical expert,' one person involved in the search noted. Being an industry expert is also no guarantee of success. Manifold's predecessor, Helge Lund, a Norwegian veteran of the oil sector, quit due to mounting investor pressure and criticism of his performance in the role. An adviser to BP's rival Shell expressed surprise that the selection panel overlooked its newest non-executive director, Simon Henry, who was appointed to the board earlier this month. Henry is a former finance director of Shell and has been influential on the board of mining giant Rio Tinto. BP's response is to argue that in bringing both Henry and Manifold aboard, the group 'had the best of both worlds'. Manifold's first task will be to keep notorious activist investor Elliott Investment Management onside. It welcomed his appointment and wanted to see him 'urgently' address the company's 'shortcomings'. But other leading American holders of BP shares have recognised that turning the tanker around will take time, and believe that the newish team deserve at least eight quarters, or two years, of grace to show that things are on the mend. The big question is whether Manifold will be able to withstand the pressure on BP to cut back spending on new oil and gas facilities while providing better returns to shareholders. He has experience in this area, having previously faced down activists at CRH. There has been some concern about the length of the process to appoint the chairman. Blanc insisted on a thorough process using head-hunters, a long-list and short-list, and bringing the board along with her. But the drawn-out procedure allowed speculation to build of a takeover approach by Shell. Fortunately for BP's top team, Shell denied any early-stage talks and took itself out of the picture for at least six months. Outside observers were not the only ones surprised by the choice of Manifold, with many BP insiders having no knowledge of his background. In a bid to bolster his credentials, he has in the past few days made a point of touring the oil giant's offices in St James's Square in central London and holding a series of one-to-one meetings with executives and colleagues. But only time will tell if the former building materials boss can cement his legacy at BP.


The Independent
2 days ago
- The Independent
FTSE 100 takes breather ahead of tariff deadlines
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With no confirmation of a US-EU deal, sentiment towards European assets 'could be fragile as we lead up to that August 1 tariff deadline,' Ms Brooks added. On Friday, Mr Trump estimated there was a 50% chance of Washington being able to strike a deal with the EU to reduce import tariffs. 'I would say that we have a 50/50 chance, maybe less than that, but a 50/50 chance of making a deal with the EU,' Mr Trump told reporters while leaving the White House for a trip to Scotland. Mr Trump said his negotiators were working 'diligently' with EU officials. In European equities on Friday, the CAC 40 in Paris rose 0.4%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt fell 0.3%. Adding to the more cautious mood is the pending resumption of trade talks between the US and China at the start of next week, with investors looking for an extension to the August 12 deadline. The confirmation of a meeting, following talks in Geneva and then London earlier this year, comes ahead of the deadline when a pause on tariffs between China and the US is scheduled to expire. ING noted tariffs were drastically cut in a 90-day ceasefire agreement that was effective in May. This is set to expire on August 12. 'One big question for markets is whether the tariff ceasefire is extended. We expect that an agreement will be attainable, but, in the interim, markets will watch closely to see if there are adjustments to current tariff rates in either direction,' ING said. Retailers were mixed as figures from the Office for National Statistics showed UK retail sales improved in June following record-setting warm weather, but fell short of expectations. Total retail sales volumes rose 0.9% in June, compared to a fall of 2.8% in May, the latter downwardly revised from a decline of 2.7%. Sales fell short of an FXStreet-cited consensus for a 1.2% rise, however. Next edged up 0.7%, but sports retailer JD Sports Fashion fell 0.9% while Marks & Spencer ended flat. Further weighing on JD Sports was a profit warning from German sports brand Puma, which sent the latter's shares plunging 16%. Puma reported a drop in sales and gross margin during the second quarter, as demand weakened across several regions, prompting a warning of weaker performance for the rest of the year. Herzogenaurach, Germany-based Puma said preliminary sales fell 8.3% to 1.94 billion euros in the second quarter ended June 30 from 2.12 billion euros a year earlier. 'Looking ahead, Puma no longer expects to achieve the currency-adjusted sales growth previously anticipated for the remainder of 2025. The softer top line performance observed in the second quarter is expected to persist for the remainder of 2025, resulting in higher inventory levels,' Puma added. The pound eased to 1.3437 dollars late on Friday afternoon in London, compared to 1.3535 dollars at the equities close on Thursday. The euro traded at 1.1737 dollars, lower against 1.1773 dollars. Against the yen, the dollar was trading higher at 147.69 yen compared to 146.79 yen. In New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.2%, the S&P 500 was 0.3% higher, as was the Nasdaq Composite. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was quoted at 4.42%, stretched from 4.40%. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury was quoted at 4.96%, widened from 4.94% on Thursday. New orders for US durable goods fell sharply in June, dragged lower by a steep drop in transportation equipment orders, according to data released by the US Census Bureau. Durable goods orders declined 9.3% month-on-month to 311.8 billion dollars, following a revised surge in May of around 17%. June's decrease, which was driven almost entirely by the volatile transportation category, marks the second decline in three months. However, it was milder than the around 11% decline expected by the FXStreet-cited consensus. Next week, the Federal Reserve is widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged, a move unlikely to please Mr Trump. T he US president has been vocal in his criticism of Fed chairman Jerome Powell, prompting much speculation as to his future at the helm of the central bank. Despite political pressure, the CME's FedWatch tool places a 97% probability that the Federal Open Market Committee will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 4.25%-4.50%. The unity of the decision will be in focus given calls from Fed officials, including Christopher Waller, for lower rates. On the FTSE 100, NatWest rose 3.4% as it raised its full-year guidance, and boosted its dividend, after a strong first half which saw loans and deposits grow. The Edinburgh-based lender reported operating pre-tax profit of £3.59 billion in the six months to June 30, rising 18% from £3.03 billion the year before. Net interest income grew 13% to £6.12 billion from £5.41 billion, while non-interest income improved 8.1% to £1.87 billion from £1.73 billion. Net interest margin is 2.28%, improved on-year from 2.07%. NatWest declared an interim dividend of 9.5 pence per share, up 58% on-year from 6p, and intends to launch a share buyback for £750 million in the second half of 2025. 'With positive momentum in our business, we are ambitious for the future and see clear opportunities for further disciplined growth,' said chief executive officer Paul Thwaite. On the FTSE 250, Wizz Air climbed 11% as Barclays upgraded the low-cost airline to 'overweight' with a 1,500 pence share price target. Close Brothers rose 4.5%, after agreeing to sell City broker Winterflood Securities to London-based Marex for £103.9 million in cash. Close Brothers expects the sale proceeds to benefit its CET1 ratio by around 30 basis points, increasing it to 14.3% from 14.0%. Brent oil was quoted lower at 68.66 dollars a barrel in London on Friday, from 69.40 dollars late on Thursday. Gold fell to 3,329.51 dollars an ounce against 3,373.34 dollars. The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were NatWest, up 17.00 pence at 518.6p, Ashtead, up 104.00p at 5,136.0p, Entain, up 17.3p at 1,000.5p, Lloyds Banking Group, up 1.26p at 79.3p, and Beazley, up 12.5p at 902.0p. The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were 3i, down 114.0p at 4,150.0p, Informa, down 20.2p at 862.8p, Rightmove, down 17.6p at 777.4p, Fresnillo, down 31.0p at 1,402.0p and Melrose Industries, down 10.0p at 510.0p. Monday's local corporate calendar has half-year results from Primary Health Properties. Later in the week, results are due from Barclays, HSBC, Shell, GSK, Unilever and AstraZeneca. The global economic calendar next week sees interest decisions in the US, Canada and Japan and nonfarm payrolls in the US on Friday.


The Independent
3 days ago
- The Independent
Shell set to report lower earnings after ‘tepid' update to investors
Shell is expected to report lower profits for recent months as the energy giant continues to battle oil price volatility and strives to return cash to its shareholders. The FTSE 100-listed company is predicted to report adjusted earnings of 3.74 billion US dollars (£2.78 billion) for the second quarter, when it publishes its latest figures on Thursday. This would be down sharply on the 6.29 billion dollars (£4.68 billion) made the same time last year. It would mean the company generates earnings of 9.3 billion dollars (£6.9 billion) for the first half of 2025. Russ Mould and Dan Coatsworth, analysts for AJ Bell, said Shell issued a 'tepid' update to investors earlier this month where it 'flagged weaker trading results at the integrated gas division and losses at the chemicals and products arm'. Earnings for its integrated gas division are forecast to come in at 1.8 billion US dollars (£1.3 billion) – down on the 2.7 billion dollars (£2 billion) made this time last year. Analysts are expecting its chemicals and products arm to slip into a 28 million US dollar (£21 million) loss for the quarter, from a 1.1 billion dollar (£820 million) profit the prior year. It comes as oil prices have see-sawed in recent months amid an uncertain geopolitical environment. Prices dropped to four-year lows in April following US president Donald Trump's announcements on tariffs, raising fears over a global trade war. They were then sent higher in June due to worsening conflict in the Middle East which led to worries that supply of the commodity could be disrupted. Brent crude currently stands at around 70 US dollars per barrel. In March, the company revealed a fresh strategy to ramp up cost savings, cut spending and boost investor returns. It said it would look to strip out a cumulative five billion US dollars to seven billion US dollars (£3.7 billion to £5.2 billion) a year by the end of 2028. At the publication of its first quarter results in May, Shell said it was continuing with its shareholder buyback and dividend payments, after raising its dividend by 4% at the end of the last financial year. Investors will be watching closely to see what the latest quarterly dividend will be alongside the results on Thursday.